A need for organs that has superseded supply has given rise to a growing number of illegitimate “medical” organizations endangering the lives of the most vulnerable. This reporter responds with solutions.
read more400 blood samples supposedly collected to research causes of diabetes in the Havasupai Indian tribe were used for other purposes. Lessons learned?
read moreWhile the word, advancement generally connotes that something is better, this reporter argues that often “advancements” come in a package with more negatives than positives.
read moreWas President Obama’s swim in the Gulf last weekend enough to convince the public that the water is clear of oil and dispersants, the fish safe to eat and the images of the BP oil spill we’ve seen since April, old news? The owners of New Orleans’ oldest continually operating oyster processor and distributor in the country, P&J Oyster Company hope so. Ironically, government’s six month moratorium on offshore drilling also continues to threaten Gulf fishermen.
read moreThis Voices’ reporter argues that for more than 70 years the oil and gas industries have been playing a crap game, wrecking havoc on Louisiana’s coastal wetlands. “As a result, we are losing a football field worth of wetlands – our natural hurricane protection – every 45 minutes. Now is the time to make sure they pay their fair share for coastal restoration.”
read moreFour and a half years after Katrina, New Orleans is both recovering and being challenged. This New Orleans reporter worries that progress is fleeting and can too easily become irrelevant and end.
read moreIf Massachusetts’ Governor signs S.2028 into law then state officials will have the power to mandate and enforce mass immunizations and quarantines. Disobedience will be met with a $1000 fine or imprisonment for to 30 days. Is this science good enough for you to roll up your sleeve? This expert says, “No.”
read moreThe worst environmental disaster in U.S. history is challenging communities that lived through Hurricane Katrina and are once again fighting for their survival.
read moreIf wildlife could talk they would cry outrage over the total mismanagement of the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history. And if lying about the actual number of barrels of oil surging into the Gulf of Mexico wasn’t bad enough, we learn from Voices’ reporter Sayer Ji (FL) that BP, with the permission of the Environmental Protection Agency (until May 26), could be causing “the mother of all extinctions.”
read moreSix major earthquakes have killed over 223,000 people and caused terrible devastation in five countries since January. Is Mother Nature sending us a message?
read more